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symbolic gestures directed at the same Europeans. For example, the first act of Christopher Columbus when he arrived in Guanahani in 1492 was to rename the island San Salvador and to become its viceroy and governor. This baptism of the island and his self-declaration as governor were explicitly addressed to the members of his expedition and refer to the collective imaginary of the Spanish Crown. Likewise, in the deed of association for the Compagnie de Saint-Christophe, it is specified that it is a matter of a “faithful association between Us.” When du Plessis and de L’Olive arrived in Martinique with the intention of colonizing it, their first act was to plant the cross symbolizing that this land had been taken.12

      Finally, the third act founding colonial inhabitation is the massacre of Amerindians and violence inflicted upon Amerindian women. These massacres were the foundation of colonial inhabitation and were recounted at length by Bartolomé de Las Casas.16 Concerning the French experience in the Caribbean, it was on the ashes of the massacred Caribs that the first French colony in Saint-Christophe was established in 1625 by the first French colonists, under the aegis of d’Esnambuc. The island of Saint-Christophe was occupied by the Caribs, the English, and the French. Pretending that they were avoiding an ambush by the Caribs, who would have tried to drive them out, the English and French, by mutual agreement, decided to massacre all the Caribs of the island and those who would come to it, as Father Du Tertre recounts: “… they stabbed almost all of them in their beds, on the same night, saving only a few of their most beautiful women in order to abuse them and make them their slaves; 100 or 120 of them were killed.”17

      This account shows the entanglement of the ideology of colonization with that of male domination, which transcends ethnic boundaries. Colonial inhabitation is explicitly gendered. It is about slaughtering men and raping women, pitting the “savages” against the inhabitants. Colonial inhabitation was established upon the massacre of Amerindians and the possession of the bodies of Amerindian women, a true enactment of the principle of othercide.

      Finally, the third fundamental feature of this colonial inhabiting was the mass exploitation of human beings via a hierarchical organization of production that featured a master and servants. Regardless of their origins or skin color, this exploitation of human beings was a condition of colonial inhabiting. We can see this intertwining of colonial inhabitation and human exploitation in the official vocabulary of French royal and colonial authorities, where the word “inhabitant” is confused with “master.” One example can be seen in the edict of the intendant of Martinique of January 7th, 1734, which “forbids the masters to have their coffee sold by their Negroes,” and where article 1 specifies that “the inhabitants who have their coffee transported by their slaves, outside of their residence [habitation], give them a note signed by them ….”22 The inhabitant is the master, the master is the inhabitant. The enslaved are the Negroes, those who do not inhabit.

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